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Move (or change direction/speed if it was already moving).
Either balanced or unbalanced force!
It will not accelerate. That means that its velocity won't change.
as stated in newtons second law of motion- an object acted upon by an unbalanced force will accelerate in the direction of that force
Newton's first law states that an object at rest stays at rest and an object in motion stays in motion with constant velocity unless acted upon by an unbalanced force. This is also called the law of inertia. So, the forces acting on an object are balanced when the object is not accelerating. This happens when the object is at rest, or when the object is moving at constant velocity. ===================== The forces on an object are balanced when their vector sum is zero.
Move (or change direction/speed if it was already moving).
the forces move
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Either balanced or unbalanced force!
It will not accelerate. That means that its velocity won't change.
as stated in newtons second law of motion- an object acted upon by an unbalanced force will accelerate in the direction of that force
Unbalanced forces cause acceleration, not movement. An object can move at a constant speed with no net force acting on it. An example would be an object falling at terminal velocity.It would have to have been already moving. Newton's First law states that an object at rest will remain at rest and an object in motion will remain in motion with the same speed and direction unless it is acted upon by an unbalanced force. The second part of the law explains this.
There's no such thing as "an unbalanced force". When the entire group of forces acting on an object is unbalanced, the object accelerates, in the direction of the vector sum of the forces.
Unbalanced forces are forces acting on an object that do not nullify one another, therefore resulting in a change in motion. An example of a sentence using the term "unbalanced forces" is "Newton's first law of motion states that an object at rest will stay at rest and an object in motion will stay in motion unless acted upon by unbalanced forces. "
First of all, there's no such thing as an unbalanced force. A group of forces maybe balanced or unbalanced, but the forces themselves aren't.An unbalanced group of forces acting on an object causes the object's velocityto change. That means the speed or direction of its motion changes. It doesn'ttell you anything about the object's position. In order to figure that out, you'dhave to know what its speed and direction were before the unbalanced groupof forces began acting on it, and you'd also need to know the object's mass.
Newton's first law states that an object at rest stays at rest and an object in motion stays in motion with constant velocity unless acted upon by an unbalanced force. This is also called the law of inertia. So, the forces acting on an object are balanced when the object is not accelerating. This happens when the object is at rest, or when the object is moving at constant velocity. ===================== The forces on an object are balanced when their vector sum is zero.
When unbalanced forces act on an object at rest, the object will move. In the two examples mentioned earlier, the net force on the object is greater than zero. Unbalanced forces produced change in motion (acceleration) and the receivers of the forces - the piano and the rope -